George H. Brown | |
Fullname: | George Henry Brown |
Birth Date: | Q3 1866 |
Birth Place: | Nottingham, England |
Death Date: | Q2 1903 (aged 36) |
Death Place: | Nottinghamshire, England |
Position: | Wing half |
Years1: | 1887–1888 |
Clubs1: | Nottingham Forest |
Years2: | 1888–1889 |
Clubs2: | Notts County |
Caps2: | 19 |
Goals2: | 1 |
Years3: | 1889 |
Clubs3: | Nottingham Forest |
George Henry Brown (1866–1903) was an English footballer who played in The Football League for Notts County.[1]
George Brown was born and grew up in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire. In 1887 George Brown signed for Nottingham Forest. Nottingham Forest was formed in 1866. In the year Brown started playing for Forest they reached the Fifth Round of the FA Cup losing 4–2 to The Wednesday. Nottingham Forest joined the Football League in 1892. George Brown left Notts County in 1888.[2] According to births, deaths and marriages data a George Henry Brown was married, in Nottingham, in Q3 1888, which was around his 22nd birthday and making his League and Notts County debut.[3] [4]
George Brown signed for Notts County in 1888. Playing at wing–half, Brown made his Club & League debut on 8 September 1888 at Anfield, the then home of Everton. Notts County lost to the home team 2–1. George Brown, playing at wing–half, scored his debut and only League goal on 15 December 1888 at Leamington Road, the then home of Blackburn Rovers. Notts County lost to the home team 5–2. George Brown scored the second of Notts County' two goals. George Brown appeared in 19 of the 22 League matches played by Notts County in season 1888–89 and scored one League goal. As a wing–half (19 appearances) he played in a Notts County midfield that achieved big (three–League–goals–in–a–match–or–more) wins on two occasions.[5] [6]
Brown was not retained at the end of the season and so he returned to Nottingham Forest. There are no records of what happened to him after he joined Forest. However, births, marriages and deaths data record that a George Henry Brown died in the county of Nottinghamshire in Quarter two of 1903. If that was the George Brown he was 37/38 when he died.[7] [8]